07 May, 2025

Stripe Rolls Out Stablecoin Accounts in 101 Countries, as Bridge Launches USDB

Three months ago Stripe completed its $1.1 billion acquisition of stablecoin orchestration firm Bridge and yesterday it revealed that Stablecoin Financial Accounts using Bridge’s technology are now available in 101 countries. Bridge still operates independently from Stripe, but the payments firm will leverage its technology, as in this example.

The stablecoin accounts particularly target businesses in countries with volatile currencies to enable them to hold dollar stablecoins. These organizations can receive money in crypto or via bank transfers and pay globally using stablecoins.

While it’s not emphasized, a key advantage is the businesses don’t have to worry about self custody or relying on a cryptocurrency exchange to hold their assets. However, the company did not elaborate on who is acting as stablecoin custodian on behalf of Stripe.

The list of countries where the accounts are offered mainly includes emerging market regions but excludes those with cryptocurrency laws. For example, it includes most African countries, but not major jurisdictions such as Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa.

Functionally, the Stablecoin Financial Accounts will initially support USDC and Bridge’s own USDB stablecoin, which was also unveiled yesterday (not to be confused with the existing token of the same name from Blast).

Bridge Unveils USDB Stablecoin

Bridge already provides a solution to enable companies to mint their own branded stablecoins and transact with them. USDB uses the same technology, with the reserves that back the stablecoin held in bank accounts and BlackRock short term money market funds. The startup’s documentation also mentions Fidelity and fund administrator Apex as partners. Fidelity has a digital asset custody license, although it’s not clear if that’s their role.

Given Bridge’s target clients are developers that want to use its infrastructure to make international payments, it will share most of the stablecoin revenues it earns on money market funds with its developer partners as fees. It also offers free transfers into USDB from other stablecoins such as USDC.

“USDB introduces a more equitable model where these benefits can be shared between the issuer, developers, and end users,” the company said.

Based on this, we’d speculate Bridge might be planning to provide code that supports developers offering rewards to their clients for holding stablecoins. However, that’s not allowed in some places.

For example, draft legislation on stablecoins in the United States bans the payment of interest to end users by the stablecoin issuer. But it doesn’t prevent other parties paying interest, so it’s viable for developers to offer rewards. By contrast, Europe has a regime that prevents interest payments by issuers and crypto-asset service providers.

The EU’s requirements would not be a priority for Bridge or Stripe, because the region is well served for payments. Stablecoin demand is driven by jurisdictions with expensive cross border payments or high inflation.

Meanwhile, we previously reported that Bridge signed an agreement with Visa last week to enable its developer partners to issue Visa cards to their clients, allowing them to spend stablecoins. Merchants are paid out in their local currency.

09 May, 2025

Ethereum Sparks Market Rally After Upgrade While Miners Face Squeezed Margins

Bitcoin Miners Expand Reserves, But Margins ShrinkBitcoin miner MARA Holdings expanded its BTC reserves by 175% year-over-year, amassing 47,531 Bitcoin now worth approximately $4.9 billion. This positions MARA just behind MicroStrategy, which still dominates the leaderboard with 555,450 BTC, according to CoinGecko data.Yet, MARA’s production tells a less bullish story. The firm mined 2,286 BTC in Q1 2025, marking a 19% drop compared to the same quarter last year. The decline follows the recent Bitcoin halving, which reduced block rewards to 3.125 BTC and tightened overall issuance.MARA's revenue fell slightly short missing analyst estimates by 0.35%, according to Zacks Research. The company has only outperformed revenue projections once in the past four quarters. Even so, MARA’s stock jumped 7.2% on May 8 before easing back in after-hours trading.Across the mining sector, companies are battling rising costs and slimmer margins:· Riot Platforms reported a 90% year-over-year increase in mining costs, now averaging $43,808 per BTC.· CleanSpark narrowly missed consensus expectations by 0.58%, while Core Scientific saw a sharper miss at 8.11%.· Hut8 reported the widest gap, falling 35% short of Wall Street revenue forecasts.Ethereum’s Pectra Upgrade Ignites Momentum ShiftAs miners grind through compression, Ethereum (ETH) staged a rally that outpaced broader crypto benchmarks. ETH surged nearly 20%, trading above $2,100, marking its strongest daily performance since 2021.The rally follows the rollout of Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade, a sweeping protocol overhaul that:· Raises the staking cap from 32 to 2,048 ETH via EIP-7251· Improves wallet flexibility through EIP-7702, introducing temporary smart contract functionality· Integrates nine additional Ethereum Improvement ProposalsThis upgrade narrowed the performance gap with Bitcoin. ETH had lagged much of the year, with the ETHBTC ratio plummeting to 0.02. Analysts from Presto Research and Flowdesk noted a return of risk-on sentiment, with capital rotating into high-beta plays.Flowdesk highlighted a "recycling of sell flow into higher-momentum assets," suggesting investor appetite is pivoting back toward altcoins and structured crypto products.Still, not all metrics inspire confidence. A report from CryptoQuant warned that Ethereum’s on-chain activity remains flat, stagnating since 2021 hinting that the rally may outpace underlying fundamentals.Bitcoin Continues Climb, ETFs Drive Upward PressureMeanwhile, Bitcoin (BTC) continues its steady ascent, trading above $102,500. ETF inflows remain positive, and analysts at Standard Chartered have begun calling their previous $120,000 Q2 target “too conservative.” The CoinDesk 20 Index, a benchmark for digital asset performance, is up over 10%.As miners fight for profitability and Ethereum regains market favor, the broader crypto ecosystem finds itself navigating a volatile blend of protocol upgrades, rising operational costs, and renewed retail interest.

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05 May, 2025

Laos Sets Sights on Becoming Asia’s Gold Trading Powerhouse

Laos has set a big goal: to become the main center for buying, selling, and processing gold in Asia within the next five years.At a high-profile meeting on 02 May, the Lao Bullion Bank (LBB) presented its ambitious strategy to position the country as a regional leader in precious metals. At the gathering, Chanthone Sitthixay, Chief Executive Officer of LBB, outlined the bank’s vision to establish economic and financial stability by transforming Laos into a gold trading hub and a frontrunner in precious metal refining across Asia by 2030.Laos stands as one of Southeast Asia’s most gold-rich nations, currently ranking third in gold production among ASEAN countries and sixth across Asia. Initial surveys have revealed an extraordinary potential, between 500 to 1,000 metric tons of untapped gold reserves scattered throughout the country.Once confirmed and certified by international geological and mining standards, these reserves could translate into national gold stockpiles valued at an estimated USD 50 to 76 billion. This would provide Laos with a substantial strategic reserve, boosting the country’s financial security and capacity for economic growth.Since its launch in December 2024, Lao Bullion Bank has advanced its mission by supporting sustainable economic development through gold-based financial services, including gold deposit accounts, gold-backed loans, and gold deposit certificates that can be used as collateral.

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